|
|
FEATURES: The Court, the Constitution, and the Culture of Freedom
By Peter Berkowitz
Abortion, affirmative action, and same-sex marriage
It is not controversial to
contend that in the United States, constitutional law serves as a decisive
battleground in the struggle over freedom’s moral and political
meaning. It is another matter to assess the impact of the battleground on
the battle, to clarify the current balance of power, and to anticipate the
battles to come.
By design, the American Constitution is the supreme
law of the land. Because it is a liberal constitution, one whose first
purpose is to protect individual freedom, the supreme law of the land
avoids taking a stand on the supreme issues. It does not aim to instruct
people on the virtues, or the content of happiness, or the path to
salvation. That’s not because it supposes that virtue is irrelevant,
happiness has no content, or salvation is a delusion. Rather, the
Constitution presupposes that the people, as individuals and through the
various associations and groups they form, will pursue these goods. And it
lays down a framework within which we, as a people, can maintain a society
where each has the liberty to pursue, consistent with a like liberty for
others, virtue, happiness, and salvation in the way each regards as
fitting. This constitutional framework consists of the enumeration of
government powers and the elaboration of individual rights. It establishes
minimum requirements and imposes outer boundaries on state action and
personal conduct while largely leaving substantive judgments about morals
and policy to individuals and democratic politics.
Accordingly, as Alexander Bickel dryly observed more
than forty years ago in The Least Dangerous Branch, to
say of some law or action or institution that it is constitutional is not
to offer very high praise. For the Constitution permits much — from
those in as well as out of office — that is foolish, vulgar, and
degrading. Yet the enshrinement in the supreme law of the land of a large
latitude for the exercise of individual freedom has consequences. It cannot
but give direction to our moral life, incite and inspire habits and hopes,
inform our sense of what is possible and of what is necessary, and instruct
our understanding of what we owe others and what we owe ourselves.
To recognize the role of constitutional law in
establishing a culture of freedom takes nothing away from the formative
role played by economic life, popular entertainment and the arts,
friendship and family, love and war, religious faith and faith in reason.
Our opinions about freedom, as well as our capacities to enjoy its
blessings and maintain its material and moral preconditions, are formed by
many forces. The supreme law of the land, however, is of special interest.
By establishing authoritative limits, by proclaiming, with the backing of
the coercive power of the state, what is forbidden, what is permitted, and
what is required, it creates comprehensive background conditions for, and
sets a tone that reverberates throughout, all spheres of our lives.
Between progress and preservation
By and large, since Marbury v. Madison (1803), when it settled the matter, the Supreme Court has been
understood to have principal — though in our separation of powers
system not exclusive or ultimate — responsibility under the
Constitution for saying authoritatively what the supreme law of the land
is. Yet most of the 80 to 90 formal
written opinions the Court delivers each year involve technical issues
which, when they are noticed at all by the public at large, do not excite
much enthusiasm or cause much consternation beyond the confines of the
parties involved. Nor do they have much discernible impact on how we
experience or think about freedom.
Of those cases that, because of the morally and
politically fraught issues at stake, do capture the public’s
attention, a preponderance arise under the Fourteenth Amendment. And the
most morally and politically fraught of these concern abortion, which
involves a contest over the interpretation of the Fourteenth
Amendment’s due process clause, and affirmative action, which
involves a contest over the interpretation of the Fourteenth
Amendment’s equal protection clause. In the not too distant future,
same-sex marriage may come before the Court and could involve a contest
over the interpretation of both clauses.
Its Reconstruction-era drafters and ratifiers could
not have intended it, but it is understandable that the grandest clauses of
the Fourteenth Amendment would in time provide the vehicle for transforming
the meaning of freedom under the Constitution — or, if you prefer,
accommodating under the Constitution the transformation of freedom’s
social and political meaning among the people. The due process clause
provides that no state “shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or
property, without due process of law.” The equal protection clause
declares that no state shall “deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” The overriding
purpose of both was to make the federal government responsible for
protecting the rights of blacks against infringement by state governments.
(For historical reasons, the privileges and immunities clause —
“No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States” —
which is part of the same sentence from Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment, has
largely become a dead letter but under different circumstances could have
played roles similar to those played by the due process clause and the
equal protection clause.) Unlike the other two Reconstruction-era
amendments — the Thirteenth Amendment (1865) outlawed slavery, and the Fifteenth Amendment (1870) secured the right to vote
for blacks — the Fourteenth Amendment’s (1868) grandest clauses did not refer
to the historical injustice that provoked them or to the race of those
individuals whose protection was their primary goal. Instead, it dealt with
the challenge of making ex-slaves and all blacks full citizens by
reaffirming universal guarantees implicit in the original Constitution and
by making the federal government responsible for ensuring compliance by the
states with those universal guarantees.
On their face, the universal guarantees embodied in
the promise of due process and the promise of equal protection are strictly
formal. They do no more than affirm that everywhere in the United States
the ideal of the rule of law will apply equally to all. So under the
Fourteenth Amendment states may deprive persons of life, liberty, or property, but only on the condition that
they do so consistent with the appropriate legal process. And under the
Fourteenth Amendment states may, consistently with the rest of the
Constitution, confer a variety of benefits or impose a range of liabilities
so long as they apply equally to all persons.
Notwithstanding the evident formality of their
promise, there are plausible arguments for deriving substance, or
particular rights, from the due process and equal protection clauses.
Indeed, the Supreme Court has embraced those arguments. Initially, in the Slaughter-House Cases (1872), dealing with the claims
by Louisiana butchers that they were denied a fair opportunity to compete
for state business, a closely divided Supreme Court held that the legal
force of the universal guarantees embodied in the Fourteenth
Amendment’s privileges and immunities clause was restricted to the
protection of the interests of African-Americans and so could not be called
upon to provide relief for any other class of litigants.
Barely 30 years later, in 1905, an again closely divided Court ushered in the notorious Lochner era, striking down a
limitation imposed by the New York state legislature on the maximum hours
per week that bakers could work. The core of the Court’s holding was
that the due process clause gave heightened protection to one specific
aspect of liberty, economic liberty, because it was fundamental to the
Constitution’s understanding of a free life and no process could be
due that, without very strong reasons, infringed it. Because of this
substantive promise implicit in the due process clause, the Court concluded
that New York could not limit bakers who might wish to contract to work
longer hours to 60
hours of work per week, even if the state’s reason for doing so was
to protect workers from unhealthy working conditions. Under the pressure
first of the Progressive movement, then the Great Depression and the advent
of New Deal liberalism, the Court gradually retreated from the view that
the due process clause gave heightened protection to economic liberty. In 1954, in Williamson v. Lee Optical, the Court
returned to a more formal reading of the due process clause, holding that
in regard to social and economic matters, legislatures were free to
regulate so long as the laws they passed had a rational relationship to a
legitimate state interest. In practice, this meant that almost any law that
did not violate a clear provision of the Constitution would likely
withstand due process scrutiny.
And then the Supreme Court changed its mind again and
revived the doctrine of substantive due process, ushering in the present
era, the Roe era.
But the liberty that the Roe-era Court found essential to the Constitution and to which it
therefore gave heightened protection differed from the economic liberty
which the Lochner-era
Court found essential to the Constitution and to which it gave heightened
protection. This time autonomy in intimate relations was singled out as the
especially important form of liberty. In Griswold
v. Connecticut (1965), Justice Douglas’s confusing opinion — which
drew on, among many other parts of the Constitution, the due process clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment — paved the way by finding in the
Constitution a “zone of privacy.” States may not prohibit
married couples from using contraceptives, Douglas held, because to do so
would trample on marriage, which the Court held under the Constitution
involved a great good and protected freedom. But what of nonmarried
couples, proliferating as a result of the 60s cultural revolution, who wished to avoid pregnancy? In Eisenstadt v. Baird (1972), the Court clarified its intentions
by extending, on equal protection grounds, the protection of privacy to
cover unmarried persons using contraceptives: The protections afforded to
married couples, the Court held, should be understood as granted to them in
the first place as individuals. Despite the disagreement about the nature
of the liberty the Constitution regarded as fundamental, in both the Lochner and Roe eras the argument for deriving
substance from form was largely the same: No process could be due, in the
sense of appropriate or fair, which denied individual liberties the Court
regarded as fundamental, or essential to the very idea of freedom under
law.
The Court has also found substance in the equal
protection clause. Its landmark decision in Brown
v. Board of Education (1954) was strictly formal, holding
that separate schools for whites and blacks involved inherently unequal
treatment of the minority race. But beginning with Bakke in 1978 and culminating with Grutter in 2003, the Court has read unequal treatment based on race into the
promise of equal protection, holding that a compelling state interest, such
as overcoming the present consequences of past discrimination or promoting
diversity in higher education, can justify preferential treatment for
blacks and other minorities. The argument for deriving unequal treatment
from the promise of equal protection is that in a society scarred by
slavery, Jim Crow, and a slew of strategies by which the majority race
inscribed disadvantages to minority races in law, it is sometimes necessary
to treat individuals who belong to disadvantaged racial and ethnic groups,
and even women (who actually constitute a majority), unequally to bring
about a condition in which all can enjoy the equal protection of the laws.
An extended review of the voluminous debate over
whether and to what extent substance can be derived from the formal
promises of the due process clause and the equal protection clause only
confirms what a brief inspection of the clauses’ language and logic
suggests: The derivation of substance from form is invited by the clauses
themselves. Perhaps it is an invitation that cuts against the original
intention of the legislators and is better declined. But appeals to
constitutional text, history, and structure will not alone decide the
issue; they provide ample evidence and argument for both choices. Because
strictly legal materials do not settle the matter, in deciding whether and
to what extent substance can be derived from the promise of due process and
equal protection, justices of the Supreme Court have no alternative but to
fall back on their opinions, both considered and inarticulate, about the
meaning of freedom and equality under law. And thus, through the opinions
of the Supreme Court, the supreme law of the land takes sides on some of
the great moral questions of the day.
No controversies that arise under the Fourteenth
Amendment create greater opportunities for introducing moral judgments
about freedom and equality into constitutional law than abortion,
affirmative action, and soon, perhaps, same-sex marriage. Nor do any other
constitutional controversies provide larger lessons concerning the culture
of freedom established by the Constitution.
Four lessons stand out. First, equality in freedom is
the coin of the constitutional realm. The central debates over the
constitutionality of abortion and affirmative action are hard cases because
they do not for the most part pit liberal principles and goods on one side
against some other kinds of principles and goods on the other, but rather
involve a confrontation between conservative and progressive
interpretations of the practical demands of constitutionally protected
freedoms. Because it is more difficult to translate arguments against
same-sex marriage into the language of freedom, there is a good chance that
should the issue come before the Supreme Court, some majority of justices
will hold that the Constitution requires it. Second, the Constitution is
not neutral between conservative and progressive interpretations of freedom
but favors the progressive interpretation, according to which government is
responsible for enlarging the sphere of individual freedom and promoting an
expansive view of equality. Third, the freedom secured by the Constitution
is inherently unstable because there is no fixed stopping point to the
demand for it: Progress in enlarging freedom’s realm provides new
desires and reasons for further enlargement. Fourth, progress in enlarging
freedom’s realm creates new threats — including the temptation
to adopt illiberal and antidemocratic measures — to the preservation
of the order that the peaceful enjoyment and wise exercise of freedom
requires. These lessons and the cases that bring them into focus show that
understanding freedom’s progress is critical to freedom’s
preservation.
Abortion and due process
Since the supreme
court’s landmark 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade, the public debate over
abortion has been full of sound and fury. Movement leaders on both sides
present their own positions as morally unassailable and accuse their
opponents of sanctioning terrible crimes. No other issue excites as much
controversy in the Senate’s consideration of presidential nominees to
the federal bench.
Yet even as partisan debate rages, the nation seems
quietly to have reached a settlement. Public opinion appears to have
stabilized in solid majorities not widely divergent from the principles
articulated in the Court’s key decisions. Early on in a pregnancy,
the morally fraught choice whether to terminate her pregnancy is best left
to the woman. Subsequently, as pregnancy advances, the choice is
increasingly a matter for state regulation in order to protect the life of
the fetus or unborn child. Late in the pregnancy, in the interest of
protecting developing human life, states may prohibit abortion. In seeking
to draw lines and balance the claims of pregnant women’s freedom and
developing human life, the settlement reflects conflicting imperatives
arising from our ideas about freedom.
Conservative ambivalence about national policy on
abortion reflects the conflict. Since 1980, the Republican Party platform has featured a pro-life
plank. Nevertheless, no Republican candidate for president since 1980 has made opposition to
abortion central to his campaign. This was undoubtedly driven in some
measure by a pragmatic recognition that a majority of the nation believes
that abortion, in what became the Clinton administration formula, should be
“safe, legal, and rare.” But another likely reason for
conservative candidates’ reticence, despite their party’s
formal opposition to abortion, is their appreciation of the force of the
arguments on the other side of the question. And this is because they share
the premise from which those arguments proceed, which is the moral and
political primacy of individual freedom.
To be sure, we refer to conservatives on the abortion
question as pro-life and progressives as pro-choice, yet both camps are pro–personal freedom.
Proponents of a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy defend the
personal freedom of women in the form of their interest in maintaining
control over their bodies and their lives. Woman can enjoy neither freedom
to live their lives as they see fit nor equality in politics and the
marketplace, pro-choicers argue, if they must unwillingly carry a fetus to
term and bear the burden of an unwanted pregnancy.
But conservative opponents of abortion also invoke
personal freedom. They emphasize the rights of the unborn child —
who, they contend, is a living person in the morally relevant sense. While
they do not reject a woman’s right to control her body and determine
the shape of her future, they do maintain that the unborn child’s
right to life supersedes it. Alternatively, conservatives invoke the
freedom connected to federalism and self-government, arguing that justices
of the United States Supreme Court, with no foundation in the Constitution,
have invented abortion rights, thereby imperiously deciding a moral
question that the Constitution leaves to the free choice of the people
through their democratically elected state legislatures. Powerful
conservative voices do oppose abortion on religious grounds, out of belief
that the unborn child is an embodied soul, that is, even in the earliest
stages of development, a unique human being. But when they participate in
the public debate, the pronounced tendency of conservative opponents of
abortion is to make their case in the language of freedom. This is
certainly true when they sit on the United States Supreme Court.
Contrary to Professor Laurence Tribe, who famously
argued that it presented a clash of absolutes, the public debate over
abortion reveals a clash of competing interpretations of freedom. Or
rather, it presents a tendency on the part of partisans to absolutize
competing imperatives that arise out of a shared belief in the fundamental
importance of freedom. The principle of choice, for example, is not, never
has been, and never can be absolute under a liberal constitution. Put most
austerely, the law hems in choice to prevent physical harm to others.
Mothers are not free to terminate the lives of their young children even if
they conclude on reflection that the children severely interfere with their
autonomy. Similarly, the right to life is not, never has been, and never
can be absolute, and our law also recognizes this. The punishment for
premeditated, cold-blooded murder is death, and self-defense is recognized
as a valid ground for taking the life of another.
Moreover, both parties to the debate show that in
practice, at least when it comes to other issues, they not only respect the
other side’s imperative but embrace it as their own. In their
opposition to the death penalty, for example, many pro-choicers proclaim
their bedrock respect for human life and their unwillingness to permit the
state, even in response to monstrous crimes, to extinguish it. And
pro-lifers demonstrate their abiding commitment to the principle of choice
in their devotion to the idea of limited government, which revolves around
protecting individuals from government interference in the decisions about
the matters that mean most to them. Indeed, the tendencies to cherish
choice and to respect human life are part of the same liberal thought: The
essence of a well-lived life is choosing freely, but without a life that is
reasonably safe and secure there can be no meaningful choice.
Despite its failings — by now even many of those
who back its result follow then-Justice Rehnquist’s dissenting
opinion that Roe’s holding, breaking pregnancy into three distinct
terms, represents a clear-cut case of legislating from the bench —
the Court’s decision in Roe v. Wade captured a good portion of the moral challenge posed
by abortion in a liberal constitutional order. It held that in the first
trimester, a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy is up to her
and the medical judgment of her doctor. Subsequent to the first trimester
but before the fetus or unborn child becomes viable outside the
mother’s womb, the state may regulate abortion in the interest of
women’s health. After viability, the state’s interest in
protecting unborn human life can take precedence over the mother’s
wish to end her pregnancy, except where abortion is necessary to protect
the mother’s life or health. The Court’s holding aimed to give
proper weight to the two critical rights — the right of women to
control their bodies and the right to life of the fetus or unborn child
— which the question of abortion, when posed within a liberal
framework, pits against each other.
The Court, however, sought to accomplish this
balancing act without specifying the criteria that determine when the
developing life within a mother’s womb becomes a person, endowed with
rights. To be sure, the Court recognized that the legal question turned on
whether the fetus or unborn child is a person within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment
(“no state shall deny to any person life, liberty, or property
without due process of law”), if a reasonable answer were available,
and on the question of whether life begins at conception. For if the fetus
or unborn child is a person in the constitutionally relevant sense, then he
or she is entitled to constitutional protection, and if life begins at
conception, how could one deny that the fetus is an unborn child and a
person in the morally relevant sense?
In his opinion for the majority, however, Justice
Blackmun tried to dodge the critical issue. Rather peremptorily, he
concluded that “the word ‘person,’ as used in the
Fourteenth Amendment, does not include the unborn.” Concerning the
beginning of life, however, Justice Blackmun found it impossible to reach a
conclusion: “When those trained [in] medicine, philosophy, and
theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this
point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to
speculate as to the answer.” Consequently, argued Blackmun, judges
had no choice but to set aside the question of when life begins and find a
ruling that did not depend on an answer to it.
In claiming that this could be done, however, Blackmun
betrayed something of a misunderstanding of the logic of his holding. For
the trimester framework was based on the idea of viability, an idea that
did not so much replace or render irrelevant an analysis of life’s
beginning (and, for that matter, a definition of a person under the
Fourteenth Amendment) to the constitutional question as provide a proxy
answer to it. The more the fetus or unborn child possesses the ability to
survive outside the mother’s womb, Roe’s reasoning suggested, the stronger is its claim to Fourteenth Amendment
protection, which is to say the more it is alive — a he or a she — and a person in
the constitutionally relevant sense.
The Court’s equivocal definition of the
beginning of life and, in effect, of personhood in terms of viability, or
the capacity of the unborn to survive outside a mother’s womb, is
unstable. As Justice O’Connor pointed out ten years after Roe in Akron Center for Reproductive Health, viability
is in part a function of technology, and technological developments
continually push the point of viability back toward conception. Yet its
flaws as a basis for constitutional compromise do not change the importance
of viability as an expression of powerful and competing moral intuitions
about freedom: that in a crucial respect the fetus or unborn child is a
member of the human family and so endowed with rights; that the fetus or
unborn child is at the same time different in morally relevant ways, so
that early in its development the right of the mother to control her body
should prevail; and that the further the fetus or unborn child develops,
the more the morally relevant differences between the fetus or unborn child
and a person fade, and the greater the state’s interest in stepping
in to protect developing human life.
While it has been subject to devastating criticism and
modified by subsequent decisions, the Roe sensibility and the ambivalence regarding freedom to which
it gives expression
still define the constitutional settlement. The late 70s and 80s witnessed the imposition, at both the state and federal
levels, of restrictions on abortion. In Maher
v. Roe (1977), the Court held 6–3 that Connecticut could provide Medicaid benefits for
childbirth while withholding benefits from women who wished to have
medically nonnecessary abortions. In Harris v.
McRae (1980), by a 5–4, margin, the Court upheld the Hyde Amendment, which banned
federal funding of medically necessary abortions. And in Rust v. Sullivan (1991), again by a 5–4 margin, the Court upheld
federal regulations that barred health care professionals who received
federal funding from offering counseling about abortion. In holding that
government was free to refuse to fully fund the exercise of a right that
the Constitution protected, the Court did nothing to change the core
resolution enshrined by Roe in the supreme law of the land: The more we conceive of the
fetus or unborn child as a person, the greater weight law must give to the
fetus’s or unborn child’s right to life in balancing it against
the mother’s right to liberty.
Nor did Planned Parenthood
v. Casey (1992), the Court’s most important abortion decision since Roe, change what Roe enshrined. In a plurality
opinion, Justices Kennedy, O’Connor, and Souter did away with Roe’s trimester framework
while insisting that they preserved Roe’s essential holding. And so they did. Viability remained
the touchstone. Before viability, the state may not impose an “undue
burden” on a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy. After
viability, “the State in promoting its interest in the potentiality
of human life may, if it chooses, regulate, and even proscribe, abortion
except where it is necessary, in appropriate medical judgment, for the
preservation of the life or health of the mother.”
The Court’s application of the “undue
burden standard” in Casey reflected competing imperatives of freedom.
A burden was undue if it “substantially interfered” with a
woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy. But what sorts of burdens
would be regarded by the Court as substantial? The Court was clear: It
would consider a burden a substantial interference if it had “the
purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman
seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus.” To be lawful, state
regulations “must be calculated to inform the woman’s free
choice, not hinder it.” States could impose regulations before
viability designed to insure that a woman’s choice was
“thoughtful and informed,” because a reasoned choice is an
expression of or enhancement of autonomy. But they were prohibited from
impairing autonomy by making an adult woman’s choice dependent on
another human being, even her husband. So under the undue burden test, the
Court upheld Pennsylvania laws requiring minors to obtain either the
consent of a parent for an abortion or a waiver of the requirement by a
judge because minors could not be presumed capable of achieving thoughtful
and informed choice on their own; an informed-consent requirement for an
adult woman involving the provision by her physician of information
concerning the nature and health risks of abortion and a 24-hour waiting period from the time
she received the information to the performance of an abortion;
consultation with caregivers about alternatives to abortion; and
state-imposed record-keeping requirements. But the Court struck down a
spousal-notification requirement.
Even as the Court’s holding in Casey reaffirmed the compromise
of principles embodied in Roe, dicta in the plurality opinion pushed for an ambitious expansion
in the boundaries of the realms protected by the principle of choice.
“At the heart of liberty,” the opinion declared, “is the
right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the
universe, and of the mystery of human life.” It would be a mistake to
confuse these metaphysical musings with the familiar and indispensable
notion of liberty of thought and discussion. For what the Court appeared to
be saying was not only that each individual had a right to determine for
himself or herself what constituted personhood and the meaning of life, but
also that the supreme law of the land had an obligation to give legal
effect to each individual’s determination. Yet were this to become
accepted doctrine, then abortion would have to be permitted whenever
individual women concluded for themselves, whatever the stage of pregnancy,
that the life within their wombs did not count as a rights-bearing human
being. That such a notion received expression at all suggests the direction
in which the justices’ thinking about autonomy is headed.
Justice Scalia penned a vitriolic dissent. He
contended that an undue burden standard had no stable meaning and merely
gave expression to the subjective judgment of a majority of the Court. This
was incorrect. In fact the Court was extending a form of constitutional
reasoning — call it autonomy-enhancing judicial review — set in
motion by Griswold and
Eisenstadt and
propelled forward by Roe.
Scalia also attacked the majority for usurping the
right of the people of each state to determine whether and under what terms
abortion would be permitted. Strikingly, even though his personal moral
judgment is that abortion is wrong, Scalia’s constitutional objection
was grounded not in morality but in a claim about freedom: In his view, the
Constitution was silent about the question of abortion and therefore left
it to the people to decide through their states’ democratic
processes. In other words, Scalia met the majority’s claims about
freedom’s imperatives under the Constitution with a counterclaim
about what those imperatives required.
The most recent controversy over abortion rights
concerns so-called partial-birth abortion and represents an effort by the
Court to build a fence around women’s autonomy. In 2003, President Bush signed a law
prohibiting partial-birth abortion, whose constitutionality is now under
challenge in the courts. The law was a response to Stenberg v. Carhart (2001), in which six members of
the Court concluded that Nebraska’s ban on a midterm abortion
procedure that involved partially removing the fetus or unborn child from
the womb, puncturing the skull, vacuuming out the brain, and then removing
and disposing of the remains, was unconstitutional. The Court reasoned that
the ban imposed an undue burden on some women for whom the procedure was
the only medically appropriate one. Yet evidence in the record suggested
that it was doubtful whether any woman, otherwise eligible, would have been
unable to secure a safe abortion had the Court upheld Nebraska’s ban
on the gruesome procedure. The Court’s grasping to find a reason to
invalidate the Nebraska ban revealed the extent to which, in the
majority’s judgment, a woman’s freedom must be fortified
against the right to life of the fetus or unborn child.
It would be a mistake to see the Court’s
autonomy-enhancing abortion jurisprudence as a clear-cut victory for the
culture of freedom, either because of the restrictions on abortion that
remain in place or in view of the remote prospect that President Bush or
his successors will appoint to the Supreme Court justices who will form a
majority for overturning Roe and Casey. The restrictions on abortion that remain in place encourage
choices that are more deliberate. And in the unlikely event that, somewhere
down the road ,the Court were to overturn Roe and thereby return the decision to the states, polling
data suggest that a substantial majority of states would maintain a regime
governing abortion much like the one now in place, and consequently no
woman would be more than a bus ride away from a legal abortion.
The problem is rather that the culture of freedom
gives rise to a tension between the sanctity of individual choice and the
sanctity of human life. And there is reason to worry that the more we
elevate choice, the more we weaken our ability to maintain a moral climate
that respects human life, which underlies the respect for individual
choice. To the extent that the supreme law of the land enshrines arguments
and attitudes that deny personhood and life to the fetus or unborn child,
and which make the determination of personhood a function of the private
judgment of individuals, the Court’s abortion decisions encourage a
belief in the violability of human life. Respect for individual choice is
rooted in the idea of a common and inviolable humanity. The more we treat
humanity as negotiable, and the more respect for it is subject to
individuals’ subjective and varying judgments, the more precarious
become the grounds for respecting humanity in ourselves and in others,
which is a precondition for respecting the choices individuals make.
In this way the Court’s abortion jurisprudence
demonstrates that progress in freedom, in the sense of expanding the domain
of protected choices, can erode the conditions for preserving freedom. In
this abortion is not unique. A similar dynamic marks the constitutional
jurisprudence of affirmative action.
Affirmative action and equal protection
In June 2003, the Supreme Court struck down the University of
Michigan’s undergraduate affirmative action program in Gratz v. Bollinger while
upholding in Grutter v. Bollinger its law school’s affirmative action program.
Progressive proponents of affirmative action could be pleased that the
Court ruled that the promotion of diversity was a goal of such overriding
educational importance that it justified a university’s taking race
into account, as one among a variety of other relevant considerations, in
admitting students. Conservative opponents of affirmative action could take
solace in the Court’s reaffirmation that quotas were
unconstitutional. In striking the balance, the Court tilted notably in
favor of the progressive interpretation of liberalism.
The cases provoked little outrage. To be sure, taken
together they amounted to a victory for proponents of racial preferences.
So long as universities were prepared to invest the time and energy that
more individualized review of applicants — or, as critics would
stress, the creation of the appearance of individualized review —
would require, few schools would be prevented by the Court’s ruling
from achieving the kind of diversity in admissions they sought. That
explains the sense of satisfaction on the left. It requires more effort to
explain why a conservative president whose party controls Congress and
whose solicitor general argued the cases let the Court’s judgment
pass with scarcely a murmur.
As with the president’s reluctance to weigh in
on abortion, his reticence on affirmative action was no doubt partly born
of the pragmatic recognition that the public is closely divided on the
question. It was also likely a response to the particular character of the
public divide, which involves a division not only between opponents and proponents, but
also within the
hearts and minds of opponents and proponents.
His reticence was a reasonable response to the
reasonableness of both divides. In fact, many opponents of affirmative
action accept the argument that the massive injustices inflicted against
blacks in this country — slavery, Jim Crow, private racial animus
— created some sort of public obligation to remedy the present
effects of past discrimination, if only through the scrupulous enforcement
of civil rights law. At the same time, many proponents of affirmative
action recognize the virtue of a color-blind Constitution and the potential
for race-based policies to polarize the public and perpetuate racial
stereotypes.
The reason for this mutual recognition, as in the case
of abortion, is that both the key alternatives in the debate flow easily
from liberalism’s fundamental premise: equality in freedom. When
proponents of affirmative action argue that the state must take race into
account in admissions to create a university community that reaps the
benefits of diversity, they can draw upon the powerful conviction that
equality in freedom depends in practice upon the state’s lifting up
those who have been trampled down by discriminatory state action or who,
owing to poverty, accident, or illness, have fallen so far behind that they
cannot catch up without benevolent state action. And when critics argue
that university admissions should be color-blind, they can appeal to the
venerable belief that equality in freedom means that one should be judged
as an individual and not as a member of a group defined by such immutable
and morally irrelevant features as skin color.
Indeed, the tension between these two respectable
liberal opinions is at the crux of Regents of
the University of California v. Bakke (1978), which set the terms of
the legal debate. In the process, it reflected the terms of debate set by
our shared liberalism. To honor the claims of equality, the four more
progressive justices in Bakke would have permitted the University of California at Davis
Medical School to set strict quotas (16 places in an entering class of 100) in order to enroll a substantial number of black students.
At the same time, and also in the name of equality, the four more
conservative justices would have forbidden all use of race in admissions.
In an opinion that many came to think of as the holding of Bakke but whose most influential
passage was joined by no other member of the Court, Justice Powell sought a
compromise. In agreement with the conservative justices, he argued that
quotas were unconstitutional while insisting, in accord with the views of
the more progressive justices, that universities could use race as one
factor among many in evaluating candidates for admission. But Powell
rejected several justifications proffered by the University of California
at Davis for the use of race in admissions, including increasing the number
of “disfavored minorities” in medicine; “countering the
effects of societal discrimination”; and increasing the number of
doctors practicing medicine in minority communities. The only
constitutionally compelling justification for the use of race, according to
Powell, was for the purpose of “obtaining the educational benefits
that flow from an ethnically diverse student body.” Justice
Powell’s reasoning suggested that the proper legal resolution of the
question must honor both the liberal imperative to treat individuals
equally without regard to race and the liberal imperative to take action to
achieve equality for members of a race denied it by prior law and custom.
It also launched the discordant argument that racial preferences for blacks
are good because they create a more educationally sound environment for
whites.
Justice Powell’s compromise also gave rise to
difficult questions of application. These concerned ends — what
legislative goals appropriately justified classifications based on the
deeply suspect category of race — and means: how to distinguish
legitimate from illegitimate uses of race by government.
In the 80s and 90s, in cases dealing with state and national set-asides of
construction work for minority contractors, the Court provided some
answers. A majority composed of the more conservative members of the Court
concluded that state action that classifies on the basis of race must be
subject to strict scrutiny, the most severe test. In Richmond v. J.A. Croson Company (1989), which dealt with federal
set-asides of funds for minority contractors, and which held that it was
constitutional for the government to classify by race to remedy the effects
of past discrimination, Justice O’Connor explained for the Court why
“strict scrutiny” was appropriate:
Absent searching judicial inquiry into the
justification for such race-based measures, there is simply no way of
determining what classifications are “benign” or
“remedial” and what classifications are in fact motivated by
illegitimate notions of racial inferiority or simple racial politics.
Indeed, the purpose of strict scrutiny is to “smoke out”
illegitimate uses of race by assuring that the legislative body is pursuing
a goal important enough to warrant use of a highly suspect tool. The test
also ensures that the means chosen “fit” this compelling goal
so closely that there is little or no possibility that the motive for the
classification was illegitimate racial prejudice or stereotype.
The Court emphasized the role of strict scrutiny in
guarding against unintended injuries that arise out of racial
classifications: “Classifications based on race carry a danger of
stigmatic harm. Unless they are strictly reserved for remedial settings,
they may in fact promote notions of racial inferiority and lead to a
politics of racial hostility.”
This concern with laws that connected skin color to
particular ways of thinking and behaving also informed the Court’s
decision in Shaw v. Reno (1993),
which, under the Equal Protection Clause, struck down a bizarrely shaped
North Carolina voting district that appeared to have no other justification
than creating a black majority that would elect to Congress a black
representative. Writing for the majority again, Justice O’Connor
emphasized that the Court would strictly scrutinize policies that
presuppose and reinforce the “perception that members of the same
racial group — regardless of their age, education, economic status,
or community in which they live — think alike, share the same
political interests, and will prefer the same candidates at the
polls.”
It is not only conservatives, however, who have voiced
concerns about the unconstitutionality of classifications that cause harm
by perpetuating invidious stereotypes. In cases concerning classifications
based on sex, it is the more progressive justices who have sounded the
warning. In Craig v. Boren (1976),
which struck down an Oklahoma statute setting the drinking age for beer for
men at 21 and for
women at 18,
Justice Brennan established the principle that classifications based on sex
were presumptively invalid, though not subject to quite as rigorous a test
as classifications based on race. And in United
States v. Virginia (1996), which held that it was
unconstitutional for Virginia to maintain a military academy exclusively
for men, Justice Ginsburg, writing for a left-leaning majority, reaffirmed
the constitutional prohibition on laws based on conventional opinions about
women’s inclinations and abilities: “equal protection
principles, as applied to gender classifications, mean state actors may not
rely on ‘overbroad’ generalizations to make ‘judgments
about people that are likely to . . . perpetuate historical patterns of
discrimination.’”
Despite these solemn warnings from conservative as
well as progressive justices about classifications that perpetuate
stereotypes by teaching that individuals who belong to the same race or sex
think and behave alike, Grutter gave constitutional protection to just such
classifications. Indeed, while pretending to apply its precedents and
established principles faithfully, the Court, in an opinion authored by
O’Connor and signed by Ginsburg, deviated dramatically from its
precedents and principles to protect practices that rely upon, indeed
celebrate, racial stereotypes.
To reach its result, the Court eviscerated its strict
scrutiny test. Without searching inquiry, indeed without any inquiry
whatsoever — and thus without addressing evidence to the contrary
examined in the dissenting opinions — Justice O’Connor’s
majority opinion accepted at face value the University of Michigan Law
School’s representation that it did not use race as an overriding
factor in admissions and that the school did not effectively employ a
quota. Moreover, in the process of sanctioning the promotion of diversity
in education as a compelling state interest, the Court all but set aside
its concern about suspect classifications that reinforce stereotypes. By
accepting racial and ethnic diversity as proxies for the critical form,
intellectual diversity, the Court went well beyond ignoring the danger of
racial stereotyping. The Court gave heightened protection to it. For the
Court said it was urgent and proper for universities to treat black skin or
Hispanic ethnicity as a sign of a certain set of experiences and a
distinctive set of opinions. At the same time, the Court also belied its
commitment to applying strict scrutiny and upholding diversity as a
compelling state interest by failing to explore what viewpoints, if any,
other than the black viewpoint and the viewpoints of other historically
discriminated against minorities the University of Michigan Law School
sought to secure to achieve the educational benefits that flow from a
diverse student body.
Strained reasoning suggests the suppression of
subterranean tensions. And the legal reasoning in Grutter, like the legal reasoning in Roe, is embarrassingly strained.
Nothing in the Constitution or in previous case law required the Court to pretend to
apply the most demanding constitutional test to the University of Michigan
Law School’s account of its affirmative action program while more or
less taking the truth of that account on faith. Indeed, nothing in the
Constitution required the Court to prefer the more progressive
interpretation of liberal principles, which calls for government measures
to promote a more inclusive society where more have the opportunity to
enjoy their freedom to the fullest, over the more conservative
interpretation of liberal principles, which focuses on keeping down the
social costs of classifying by race. That a Court on which sit seven
justices appointed by conservative presidents made these choices is
testimony to the power of the progressive interpretation of liberalism.
Same-sex marriage
More evidence of that power is provided by the revolutionary speed with which
attitudes in the United States about same-sex marriage have changed. Just 15 years ago, very few gay
men or lesbians, whatever other grievances they harbored, thought or felt
themselves to be deprived of civil rights because the law restricted
marriage to a man and woman. Nor did it occur to their fellow citizens that
such a right existed. Yet today a substantial and growing minority of the
public supports same-sex marriage, and even more favor civil unions, or the
enshrinement in law of social and financial benefits for same-sex couples
similar to those received by married couples. The Fourteenth Amendment may
well be the vehicle through which the law comes to recognize same-sex
marriage as a constitutionally protected right. The engine driving the
change is the imperative of equality in freedom. And, in contrast to the
debates over abortion and affirmative action, the difficulty that opponents
of same-sex marriage face in translating their objections into the language
of freedom is likely to ease recognition of the revolutionary new right
under the Constitution.
The legal turning point in the debate over same-sex
marriage came with the Supreme Court’s 2003 decision in Lawrence v. Texas. Like its opinion in the affirmative action cases that year,
the Court’s opinion in Lawrence, invalidating on due-process grounds a Texas law that
criminalized homosexual sodomy, provoked relatively little outrage from the
Bush administration. Understandably, conservatives were not spoiling for a
fight to defend the right of states to regulate the private, intimate
conduct of consenting adults. Here their preference for limited government
outweighed what moral disapproval they felt for homosexuality. And yet, as
Justice Scalia angrily pointed out in dissent, the reasoning adopted by the
Court undermined the basis for any future regulations that the majorities
might wish to impose on moral grounds.
Reminiscent of the sleight of hand performed by
Justice O’Connor that same season in Grutter,
Justice Kennedy’s majority opinion in Lawrence, in the guise of
applying well-accepted tests to changing social circumstances, managed to
effect a transformation of the Court’s doctrine. Justice Kennedy was
obliged to subject the Texas statute to the lowest level of judicial
scrutiny. Social and economic regulations that are reviewed under so-called
rational basis scrutiny almost always pass. That is because the test
requires the Court to ask whether there is any conceivable basis for the regulation in question. In other words,
the question before the Court was not whether the law at issue was wise or
just or represented sound public policy, but whether it embodied manifestly
irrational thinking and indefensible public policy. Of course, if you
believe that respecting people’s choices about what matters most to
them, particularly when those choices do not cause physical injury to
another, is the essence of liberty under law, then criminalizing homosexual
sodomy is irrational and indefensible. But then again, the Constitution
does not enact Mr. John Stuart Mill’s liberty principle, and it is
not irrational and indefensible to disagree with it.
A narrower ground was available than the one the Court
embraced. In her concurrence, Justice O’Connor argued that it would
have been preferable for the Court to invalidate the Texas statute on equal
protection grounds, holding that it was constitutionally impermissible for
a state to criminalize homosexual sodomy while permitting heterosexual
sodomy, thus proscribing a behavior for one group of people that it allowed
for another. This approach would have left considerably more latitude
toward states and would have avoided enshrining a strong moral judgment in
the supreme law of the land. By adopting the broader justification, the
Court went a long way toward declaring that any laws suggesting that
homosexuality was morally different from heterosexuality were
unconstitutional.
Justice Scalia was right that it is a short step from
the enshrinement of this moral judgment in the fundamental law of the land
to a constitutional right to same-sex marriage. He is probably wrong to
think that it was avoidable under the Court’s Fourteenth Amendment
jurisprudence.
A preview of things to come was offered just four
months later by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts. In Goodridge v. Department of Public Health, the sjc
declared a state constitutional right to same-sex marriage. While the
Massachusetts court’s decision upheld the right on equal protection
grounds derived from the state constitution, the parallel to Lawrence’s due
process argument was plain: There are no rational grounds, the court
argued, for denying two men or two women who love each other the
opportunity to enjoy the legal benefits that a state offers to a man and a
woman who love each other.
Here many conservatives drew the line. In particular,
social conservatives vehemently objected on moral and religious grounds.
But some who drew the line did so halfheartedly. President Bush, for
example, embraced an amendment to the Constitution in 2004 defining marriage as a union of
one man and one woman. It is notable, though, that during that campaign
year he spoke rarely and briefly about the issue and since reelection has
done very little to rally support in Congress. And this from a president
who knows how to pursue policies that provoke intense opposition. To be
sure, in November 2004, eleven states passed laws in special referenda banning same-sex
marriage. Still, the vast majority of states did not take action. Perhaps
one reason for the president’s restraint is that the most compelling
case conservatives make against same-sex marriage is not compelling enough
to justify changing the Constitution to ban it.
By separating matrimony from parenting, the most
powerful conservative argument against it runs, and by implicitly rejecting
the idea of the natural complementarity of the sexes, same-sex marriage
will further undermine marriage, which has long been at risk and is the
most vital institution in society for the formation of character in
children. Conservatives may well be right about the consequences of
same-sex marriage — but, as they hardly need to be reminded, there
are always countervailing considerations.
One such is the mistake of treating the Constitution,
the supreme law of the land, as an instrument of social policy. Another is
the natural momentum in a free society of the arguments — rooted in
the freedom to choose and equality before the law — for conferring
upon same-sex couples, as the Massachusetts court put it, “the
protections, benefits, and obligations of civil marriage.” But there
is another, closely related but less obvious consideration: The law
generally does not prohibit practices on the grounds that they harm
marriage, especially if the practice can be seen as enhancing equality in
freedom. Just consider the variety of practices that conservatives have
argued, persuasively, do harm to marriage but which they by and large, and
properly, do not seek to prohibit.
There are good conservative reasons to believe that
the invention of a cheap and reliable birth control pill, which hit the
market in the mid-1960s, has weakened marriage. The pill greatly reduces a key cost
associated with premarital sex: unwanted pregnancy. It thus removes a
powerful inducement to marriage — the promise of regularly available
sex — by making sex more readily available, because much less risky,
before marriage. Yet nobody wants the state to take action to curb use of
the pill.
Cohabitation before marriage, conservatives argue,
also weakens marriage. Living together, especially attractive to the young,
mobile, and ambitious, normalizes the idea that marriage is one lifestyle
option among many, an expression of personal commitment rather than a
sacred obligation. While lamenting this development, conservatives do not
wish to pass laws to restrict it.
No-fault divorce also appears, from a conservative
perspective, to diminish respect for the sanctity of marriage. It lends
support to the idea that marriage is optional, a contract like all other
contracts, which one can break at will, incurring only the liability, as in
all breaches of contracts, for court-awarded monetary damages. But most
conservatives agree that it is too late in the day to return to a more
demanding regime.
The abolition of the civil action for alienation of
affection also contributes to the devaluation of marriage. Conducting an
affair with another person’s spouse no longer represents an injury
cognizable by law. It is more akin to stealing another person’s best
friend. Neither society as a whole, nor any significant subset of
conservatives, clamors for changes in the law of torts to make seducers of
spouses legally liable for coming between man and wife.
Finally, and not least, the traditional foundation of
marriage has been shaken by the movement over the past 40 years of women out of the home
and into the workplace. Success in professional life makes women less
financially dependent on men, so less in need of marriage as a source of
economic security. It also provides women with more opportunity to
experiment romantically — which, whatever the intentions of the
experimenters, delays marriage and children and may, as the years pass,
because of the hardening of sentiments and the realities of biology, reduce
the likelihood of both. Yet conservatives these days are more likely to
defend the choice of those women who decide to stay at home than to argue
against women who choose to work. Thus, they affirm, and indeed expand the
meaning of, the liberal principle of choice.
Now, if you believe that the birth control pill,
cohabitation before marriage, no-fault divorce, laxness concerning
adultery, and the movement of women out of the home and into the workplace
undermine marriage — as do many conservatives — and yet you are
unwilling to support legislation to prohibit these practices because of the
cost to individual freedom — an unwillingness many conservatives
share — how in good faith can you single out same-sex marriage for
legal prohibition?
One answer is that, in contrast to same-sex marriage,
the aforementioned practices do not involve formal state approval, either
symbolically or through the conferring of financial benefits. They call
only for the state to mind its own business. In contrast, proponents of
same-sex marriage seek both the financial benefits and the symbolic
legitimation that the law confers through marriage.
In fact, in minding its own business with respect to
all other aspects of intimate relations, the state makes a powerful
statement of moral and political principle: The organization of intimate
relations is a matter of personal choice. Now that bigotry against
homosexuality is on the run, express legal liabilities have been lifted
(with the notable exception of the military’s “don’t ask,
don’t tell” policy), popular culture has increasingly embraced
gays and lesbians, and the question of same-sex marriage has been brought
out into the open and into focus by vigorous public debate, the speculative
harms critics associate with same-sex marriage will, in more and more
people’s minds, be outweighed by the commitment to toleration of
choices that differ from one’s own — particularly in matters
relating to love and the family, especially between consenting adults where
physical harm is not an issue. While majorities in the United States may
not yet be ready for same-sex marriage, larger majorities will oppose
legislation that smacks of anti-same-sex animus.
This is not to approve of the 4–3 decision by the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts. The sjc imperiously denied any rational basis whatsoever for
legislation restricting marriage to a man and a woman. Unlike the
prohibitions on interracial marriage properly struck down by the U.S.
Supreme Court in 1967 in Loving v. Virginia, the prohibition on same-sex marriage, as the
Massachusetts dissenters argued, is connected to valid policy questions.
The color of one’s skin has no bearing on the essential purpose of
marriage, but same-sex marriage raises concerns about parenting, child
rearing, and the structure of the family, which lie at the very heart of
marriage’s purpose.
And yet opponents of same-sex marriage must reckon
with the fact that over the past 40 years the very meaning of marriage has undergone a
substantial change. The sexual and cultural revolutions of the 1960s have pushed the bearing
and rearing of children from the core of marriage’s social meaning.
Ask twentysomethings and thirtysomethings what they hope for from marriage.
They will, of course, tell you that they want love and that they definitely
want companionship — indeed, that they expect their spouse to be
their best friend. And obviously they want to share the pleasures of sex.
Then ask them about children. Many will pause and say well, yes, certainly,
they are thinking about children, and eventually, somewhere down the line,
they expect to have one or two. But children, once at the center of
marriage, have now become negotiable, and what used to be negotiable
— love, companionship, sex — has moved to the center. Under
these circumstances, legal recognition of same-sex marriage will not
represent a change in the meaning of a venerable social institution through
law, but rather an adaptation of law to a profound change in social
meaning.
To be sure, the fundamental importance of marriage to
a free society is recognized in a line of cases running from Meyer v. Nebraska (1923) and Pierce v. Society of Sisters (1925), which affirmed the right
of parents to control the upbringing and education of their children, to Loving, where Chief Justice
Warren affirmed that “the freedom to marry has long been recognized
as one of the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of
happiness by free men.” But it is difficult to formulate in the
language of freedom an argument for preserving in law a meaning of marriage
that it has lost in practice. That is why, although it reflects a more
radical social step than abortion or affirmative action, same-sex marriage
will encounter less powerful opposition than have abortion and affirmative
action from the supreme law of the land.
In fact, it is quite possible that a constitutional
showdown will be averted. Momentum for a constitutional amendment has
dwindled. Because of the force of arguments about individual freedom and
equality before the law in a free society, other state legislatures will
likely do on their own in the coming years what the Massachusetts
legislature is doing under the compulsion of its highest court — vote
to grant same-sex couples the protections, benefits, and obligations of
civil marriage. But should the issue find its way to the Supreme Court, the
ability of proponents of same-sex marriage to make their case
straightforwardly in the language of freedom and the inability of opponents
to frame their legitimate concerns in that language will likely result in
same-sex marriage’s being enshrined in the supreme law of the land.
Progress v. preservation
he American
constitutional order speaks the language of freedom.
All of the great moral questions of the day eventually get translated into
that language, and partisans must turn it to their advantage or almost
certainly see their cause go down to defeat. The Fourteenth
Amendment’s due process clause and equal protection clause provide an
all but irresistible invitation from the Constitution to inscribe
resolutions to controversies about equality in freedom in the supreme law
of the land.
A distinct pattern has emerged. On the touchstone
issues, the Court has given a substance to equality in freedom that has
extended the protected sphere of individual choice and has expanded the
privileged range of individuals who enjoy it. This in turn has prepared the
way for further extension and expansion. The Court has done so in the face
of respectable alternative interpretations of the substance of equality in
freedom, which stress the social costs of expanding choice, particularly
the damage done to the material and moral preconditions for maintaining a
society of free individuals. Both interpretations of the substance of
equality in freedom — that which focuses on releasing individuals
from fetters and that which concentrates on the need to restrain
individuals and prepare them for the responsibilities of freedom —
belong to the liberal tradition. Yet in the contest between them, the
liberal spirit naturally prefers measures that enlarge the realm of
individual autonomy or promote a more egalitarian society over those that
seek to contain the social costs of those measures and to conserve the
background conditions that keep autonomy from deteriorating into anarchy.
This progressive proclivity is rooted in the nature of
the liberal spirit and sown into the fabric of human nature. The rights in
terms of which the liberal tradition defines freedom are essentially
expansive in nature, steadily eroding the limits on individual choice
established by law and custom. Of course, the constraints imposed by the
state, religion, tradition, custom, public opinion, and taboo do not
immediately vanish with the advent of the liberal state. As Tocqueville
observed of America in the 1830s, religious belief prevented Americans from entertaining
thoughts and pursuing fancies formally permitted to them by their freedom.
But with each new victory won by freedom, religious beliefs slacken, morals
relax, and institutions once regarded as sacred or permanent appear more
artificial and alterable. The previously unthinkable becomes routine, and
restraints that had seemed indispensable to civilized life fall to legal
challenge. Over the centuries this dynamic has served justice, bringing the
reality of American life more in line with the promise of American life.
Yet the liberal antipathy toward the restraint of freedom doesn’t
abolish society’s need to conserve freedom’s material and moral
preconditions. It just makes it extremely difficult to defend that need as
a legal requirement.
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the
requirements of due process and equal protection illustrates the dilemma.
The respect for equality in freedom that underlies the abortion right is
compromised by the determination to deny the moral status of developing
human life. The respect for equality in freedom that informs the
constitutional right to conduct affirmative action programs on campuses is
weakened by the university’s routine reduction of individuals to the
groups they are brought to campus to represent. And the respect for
equality in freedom that will justify striking down as unconstitutional
laws that keep individuals of the same sex from marrying will further shake
the ideal of marriage, whose promise of permanence was bound up with the
biological realities of parenthood and recognition of obligations
across the generations.
More than ever, it is useful to recall Alexander
Bickel: To proclaim a practice or institution constitutional is not to
confer upon it very high praise. Some of what our Constitution permits is
right and proper. Some is neither wise nor beneficial. Much is a matter of
justice and accompanied by a complex array of benefits and burdens. It is
one of our Constitution’s great achievements to have established a
sturdy framework that encourages progress in freedom. It is no small part
of the wisdom of the Constitution to also give wide scope to the
examination of the social costs of freedom’s progress, for the
blessings of freedom cannot be preserved without attending to them.
|
QUICK LINKS:
EMAIL ALERT
CONTACT US
TOOLS:




|